
There's been a huge amount of work done in the last few years to reconcile the dozens of emulators and systems and the nightmare of keybindings, menus, and configuration. I also have no idea what I'm doing, so I've also got ignorance on my side. They will prefer original Arcade CRT monitors and more expensive, higher quality parts. Hardware Disclaimer 2: Many folks that build arcade cabinets have a purist view of how these things should be done.

What I'm doing here is putting a computer in a pretty box. I do own some original arcade boards, but if you want to emulate arcade games with MAME (Multiple Arcade Machine Emulator), you can search the 'tubes. This series of posts has nothing to do with that. Software Disclaimer 1: There's all sorts of iffy legal issues around emulating arcade games with boards/ROMs you don't own. The MAME system is in my office and runs to this day on Windows 7 with a HyperSpin frontend. When I made my first MAME cabinet I put a small "Shuttle PC" inside. It's super fun and will only take a few weekends and perhaps a few hundred bucks. I wrote up a complete 7 part series on making your own MAME Arcade Cabinet.
RASPBERRY PI PCSX2 FULL SIZE
A full size MAME Cabinet - The Complete MAME Cabinet How-To

That said, I'm going to briefly go over my other systems because they may be more attractive for your needs.

This is my best retro arcade yet because it's got HDMI out and I can take it to friends' houses. Last week I build a RetroPie into an X-arcade tankstick. Eight years ago I stumbled on the husk of an old arcade cabinet and along with my buddy John Batdorf, proceeded to reclaim the cabinet, refinish, paint, and turn it into a proper MAME (Multi-Arcade Machine Emulator)Īs an aside, a bit after helping me this project, John happened to start an amazing business making furniture with reclaimed wood, check him out at.
